THE COLUMBIAN. -Published Evkut Friday, AT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., BY r Published Evkrt Friday, at ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., BY A E. 0. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor. IE. 0. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription Hates : Advertising Bates : One year, in advance : . . .$2 00 Six months, " i w Three months, " 50 VOL. IV. ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, MARCH 21, 1884. -j. v-. cyty I -'ne square uu lines; nrsi insertion. . $z JN J' OO. Each subsequent insertion 1 One square (10 lines) first insertion. . $ 2 00 00 THE COLUMBIAN. COLUMBIAN i I t i GEN. STEEDMAN'S TITLE. How Hp Havrd Thomas and Came to be Called "Old Chickamauga, f Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. As we sat one night in 1875 in the rattv old editorial rooms of The Toledo Democrat and Hevald. of -which Steed- man was "leader" writer and I manag ing editor, I asked him for the story of Chickaniauga, where he won his stars and the soldier title of "Old Chick amauga," of which he was so proud. He told it as coldly as if it was a dream to him : "Why, my boy, there wasn't much to it. I was in charge of the First di vision of the reserve corps of the army of the Cumberland, and had been sta . tioned at Ringgold, or Bedhouse bridge over the Chickamauga. 31 v orders were explicit, 'to hold the bridge at all hazard,' and prevent the enemy from flanking Uen. 1 nomas. J. he enerav disappeared from our front. The sound of cannonading and battle to the northward told me that the enemy had massed against our centre, and a great battle was on. .From the noise of conflict I judged, and rightly, that Thomas was sorely pressed. I felt that my command was needed, and yet could not understand the absence of new orders. I waited impatiently enough from daylight till nearly noon, hoping for some word from my commanding officer. Finally I decided to risk my neck rather than to see the Union army destroyed through inactivity on my part. Calling a coun cil of officers and men, I explained the situation, read my orders, told thom my decision, and that on my shoulders should fall whatever of responsibility attached to the disobedience of orders. You know the inexorable military law is to ask no questions, obey all orders, and accept the consequences.' I knew that if my movement was a failure, my judgment mistaken, nothing less than court-martial and death awaited me. "But the battle was on, and every fibre in me said I was wanted. "We burned the bridge, and marched by the cannon's sound to Thomas' aid. Through corn fields, thickets, and oak woods we made a fearful tramp, for no man in the command knew the country, and our only guide was the cannon's boom. When I reported to Thomas he was in despair at the loss of the key to his position, which had just been cap tured by Gen. Hindman's rebel corps. The place was indicated to me by a Hash of guns and a rattle of canister on the dry leaves of the tree under which Thomas and I stood. It was a steep ascsnt, with a densely -peopled crescent ridge, that lay before ns. There was a forbidding thicket and an oak forest between us and the belttf riTzS that marked the edge of a broad plateau on which the enemy was jubilant with victory. 'There, there,' said Thomas, as the guns flashed again. 'Now, you see their exact position. You must take that ridge.' My reply was : Til do it. In thirty minutes after we reached the field we were storming the rock mauga. It was an awful that slope, everv foot of of Chicka contest up which was planted with death. "We went in with 7,500 men, and only 4,000 reported for duty at the next muster. We went up, up, up till we reached the summit, and planted our selves there to stay. It was a terribly hot place, and we made the plateau a lake of blood before we drove Hindman back. I rode back and reported to Thomas. I was bloody from head to food. He clasped my hand and said with great emotion : 'Gen. Steedman, you have saved my army.' I got my stars not long afterwards, and that's about all there was to it. Yes, it was a big risk I ran, but I was right, and I knew it' As he rode to battle that day, he met Gen. Granger, who said feelingly: "Steed, old boy it's going to be d d hot in there. If anything should happen, have you any requests to make of me?"' The vein of sentiment was running deep in the questioner's heart, but the practical soldier responded in words that have since been memorable "Yes, Gen. Granger: if I fall in the fight please see my body decently buried and my name correctly spelled in the newspapers," and he deliberately spelled it. Jean Franco! Millet's Poverty. New "York News. Speaking of Millet, a friend who wa3 in Barbizon during his latter days there has told me some interesting stories of him. One strikes me as being pecul iarly pathetic. A party of artirts were in the habit of making a night resort of a wine shop of the most inexpensive sort. They were all friends of Millet, but he rarely came among them. They tried to induce him to join them fre quently, but he always found some ex cuse until the landlord told them : "It's no use, gentlemen ; he will not come." "But why not?" they asked. Mine host looked embarrassed, and after some hesitation answered apol ogetically: You will excuse me, gentlemen, but he is too poor." "Too poor to drink 5 cents' worth of brandy a night ! Then we will pay it for him." "Gentlemen," said the publican, gravely, "no one need pay for anything Mr. Millet will accept from me but he will accept nothing which he cannot pay for ; so he does not come to see us." It was in such poverty that the man whose pictures now represent fortunes in commercial value drifted into his grave. Progress in Hponge fishing. ExchanH. The Greek sponge fisheries have been very much developed within the last two years, and at the present time there are 723 boats, 183 of which are provided with diving bells, employed in this bus iness. The fishing season commences in April and ends in August, the boats whieh are provided with diving bells going as far out to sea as Tunis and Tripoli, while the others do not go be yond the coasts-of Greece and Crete. The value of the sponge taken during the past season is put at .1)0,000. Inter Ocean: It is estimated (hit the United States will contain 150,0)0, 000 people fifty years hence. Poetijy and 31nole. Cr. Phrenological Journal. Neither can the poetical gift be ex plained on physiological grounds. Nothing is more common than to find persons of either sex, with the cranial and phvsiological- conditions united, which, according to popular belief, should furnish the possessor with light and heat div.ne in tropical abundance. liut, however, mucu tae lustrous eye may roll, the cheeks grow hollow, and the Byronio melancholy be lmror tuned to come at once and come to stay, still the anxious friends are only rewarded, in most instances, with the nervous irritability of a poetical pa tient, and the disgusting doggerel of a future maniac. He may get dyspepsia, "get up on his ear," get drunk, or get his friends out of patience with him, like a full grown poet, but the inspiration of the latter he can never get. On the other hand, it is not hard to call to mind mighty monarchs in the realms of verse, who might, with proper training, have rivaled John C. lleenan in muscular power. Burns "llobert the plowman," "Love-sick Robin," "So cial Bob," or "Banting Bob," just as you want him could not only write the best poetry of any man in his time, but he could out-lift "for the drinks," the stoutest stonemason in Ayrshire. Keats, "the most poetical of all the poets, could write "Hyperion," "Endymion,' "Ode to a Dead Lrn " or whip a batcher, just as he saw fit. Byron could draw up from his soul-wells the finest and sweetest draughts of poetical nectar, or could "whip fellows," get fat, or swim the Hellespont at his pleasure. Bare Ben Jonson do you think ho had no flakes of fat lining his ribs, or oily chunks hung to his jaws? If so, read a description of his elegant anatomy and be corrected. Shakespeare (no matter how vou spell him had no cheeks hollow enough to hold a gill of water, but the most obstinate must con fess . that Mr. Shakespeare, deer poacher, was a erood-sized poet, not withstanding. A Mtory of IVhlttler. Harriet Prescott SpofTord in Harper's. People come to him, also, in their grief and trouble, and to more than one tortured soul has he given peace. The story is told of a friend of his early days, m the time when religion held men by cruder bonds than now, who was pursued by the idea of the sin against the Holv Ghost, and felt him self doomed to damuation. "And so thee really thinks thee will go to hell ?" said Mr. " hittier, after listening to the tale of torment. "Oh. I am sure of it," cried the suf ferer. "Does thee hate thy fellow-men?' asked Mr. Whittier. "No, no," aid his jAihappy friend. "Don't thee hate God, then?" came the next question. I love Him, was the answer, what ever happen to me." Don t thee hate God, who would send thee to hell, and let others, who thee knows have led worse 11a es, (?) to heaven?" , No. I amWrlad of every ne thit is saved, even if lam to be a castaway.' "Now what does thee think the devil will do with thee? How xan he use thee one who loves the God that con demns him to torment, one who loves his fellow-men. and would keep them out of the clutches of Satan how can the devil employ thee or endure thee?" For the first time in months the wretched man laughed with his old heartiness, and from that moment be gan to shake off" his morbid terrors. Horace ;relry a.ia danko Man. New York World. Horace Greeley, although he "took the papers," was once' sought to be vic timized at the well-worn dropped pocketbook" game. The man who picked up the book, plethoric with bo gus money, right at Mr. Greeley's feet, was compelled to go out of town im mediately to his sick wife, and begged the loan of mi iu advance of the award which would surelv be offered if Mr. Greelev would keep the book. Mr. Greeley consented, and; only saved him self by taking the $o0 out of the book. The man remonstrated. "It will not do to touch the money," he said; "you had better give me $50 out of your own pocket. lilessmv soul, my friend, ex claimed the innocent Horace, "I never carried as much money as that with me in my life!" The man impatiently snatched the book out of Mr. G.eeley's hands and hurriedly left to visit his sick wife. A Professional A (ton in Suggested. New York World. 1 By the way, why should not the prin cess of Wales discover some Adonis some exquisitely handsbme3'oung man and have his portrait painted by a dis tinguished artist and set in a diamond mounted frame? This professional beauty game, as at present conducted, is very one-sided. If married men may go into raptures over a professional beauty and sit enthralled over her pic ture, why may not married women have a similar privilege In regard to profes sional Adonises? What is sauce for the married goose ought to be sauce for the married gander, and the husband who runs after the portraits of lovely women can not fairly object if his wife should run alter uie poiiraus oi nanusome men. Which of our enterprising artists will start the enterprise of the professional Adonis as a companion to the profes sional beauty ? Kl Madhi and III Followers. Chicago Tribune. The Rev. Dr. Dichtl, an Austrian missionary priest who spent some time in the Soudan, gives the following description of the Madhi: "He is aboat 40 years old, tall, and of coppeiy-red complexion. An emissary sent to interview him some time ago found the Madhi at Abba, surrounded by 500 or 000 followers, all of them naked, with iron chain belts round their waist, and with broad drawn sword3 in their hand-. The Madhi occupied a raised seat in their midst, and in his right hand he held a prophet's staff. The three marks by which he knew the Egyptian government to be false iu Islam were that they allowed Christians to have churohes of their own, that the afforded the;n protection, and that tuo government levied taxes." CANARIES FOR THE MARKET. Where They Are Kalsed Methods of Musical Training. Philadelphia Times. Most of the birds brought to America are bred in the Hartz mountains, of Hanover, a range in the famous Black Forest of Germany. Here the industry is carried on extensively by the peas ants, who derive from it their chiej means of subsistence. The majority of them are so poor that the agents of the two New York firms who enjoy a mo nopoly of the importations are obliced. . j .. i. u: r ii t breeding season enough money to pro vide the food necessary to rear'tho young birds. One firm at the opening of the present season thus laid out about $10,000. The superiority of the German birds lies in their training, great attention being paid to improving their song qualities. The canary is a great imitator of sounds, and will learn almost any thing that is thrust upon his attention when young. He may ac quire the chirp of the robin if he hears no other song, or may be taught the air of a popular song. A dealer on Bidge avenue exhibited a canary at the Centennial exhibition which could sing Yankee Doodle, and which he sold for $100. Another, owned by the same man, rendered "Die Lauderbach Maidchen" in an excellent manner, l nave even known of a ca nary that could talk. Its owner got it when it was young and kept it where it could hear no other bird sing, and finally succeeded in teaching it to pronounce its own name, the name of its mistress and one or two other words. The Ger man peasants take a Ivautage of this faculty in teaching the young birds to sing. One plan is to place .them- in a large cage, partitioned so as to prevent its inmates from seeing each other; any fine singing bird, either a canary, a sky lark or nightingale, is placed out of Bight but within hearing of the young canaries. After six months of this imprison ment the pupils, who have never seen their teacher, will have become perfect musicians. Another plan is to place the young ones in a room barely light enough for them to see to eat, where an instrument called a bird-organ is played for an hour or more each day in the hearing of the learners, who listen very attentively if they are not disturbed, and, by practicing the notes heard, are soon able to sing them perfectly. Birds trrfined by this process are known as Andreasberg rollers, and become verv proficient in the "water roll," the bell and flute notes and various trills. After this course of training is com pleted the birds are separated. Each one is placed in a small cage, made by the peasants from fir wood, and fast ened together with pegs instead of nails. They remain in these narrow quarters until they cease to be merchandise, and are finally domiciled in the homes, where they become the pets of the family- Gossip About Senator Joe Brown. '"Carp"' in Cleveland Leader. So Joe Brown is being denominated the chain gang senator because he has a lot of penitentiary convicts who work in his coal mines in Georgia. They cost him less than $20 a year apiece, and I warrant vou they have to work hard, for Brown was brought up to labor. He was born in the Pickms dis trict of South Carolina 02 years ago, and when a boy used to haul vegetables to the county seat, and had a team with which he used to plow the garden plats of the villagers. He has a brother in South Carolina who now has a good plantation, and is worth some money, but nothing like that of the saintly ooe, who is worth, 1 am told, perhaps $;,- 000,000, and keeps adding to his pile by compound interest. Senator Brown lives here at the Metropolitan hotel. where he has three rooms aud an office. He has a seat down near the speaker's desk, and is the most patriarchal-look ing of the senators. He has a darc complexion, flat cheeks, and a long beard of yellowish grav. He is not fond of newspaper men, and will seldom submit to an interview. He is now the biggest man in Georgia, next to Bob Toombs, but I believe that Toombs is the better liked. Toombs and Brown have been run ning on dinerent platforms since the war. iJOD ioombs would never con sent to reconstruction, but Brown ac cepted the inevitable at once and turned the change to his own advan tage. It is said that this difference of opinion came once near causing a duel between Toombs and Brown. Tho challenge was issued, but for some rea son the matter was adjusted without fir ing. The actions of the two men in re gard to this duel, if reports tell the truth, show well the character of each. Gen. Toombs, easy and confident, trust ing to luck, made no preparations for the fight. Gov. Brown did just the con trary. He put all his papers in perfect order, drew up a will, and then set up a target and commenced practicing. Liong before the duel was to have come off he was ready for it, and i doubt not he would have shot to kill. Fortunately for both parties, for Toombs is a dead shot, the quarrel was peacefully settled. Hope for Sir. Hi rob. Utica Observer. Billy Birch, of the San Francisco minstrels, has experienced religion, and is confessing all of his former misdeeds. To a reporter he admitted to have told one story for five years ; and to have dropped it men oniy because ne was tired of it. Ihe public, he said, laughed just as heartily over it the last time he told it as on the first night. The story was undoubtedly the one about his uncle "Jim" Blackstone, of Kirkland, eendmg him a bag of pippin apples, and then going to New York and remaining a week with him, in en deavoring to recover the pillow case that held them. There is hope for Billy in this world if he perseveres. Prof. Joseph Landon : To teach so as to bring children frequently into tears is not difficult to one who knows them, but it is in the highest degree mischiev ous Boger A. Pryor says that they have very peculiar uewspaper reporters in London. When he told them ho had nothing to say they left at once. Vanderbllt's Vindication. New York Cor. Chicago News. A majority of the isew xork papers seem to have united in the effort to make W. H. Yanderbilt a social martyr by their continued i n I senseless abuse I think it high time that even Yander bilt was given his rights, notwithstand ing the fact that he stands charged with the enormous crime of accumulating $200,000,000. " Who wouldn't do the same thing if he could ? Is there mm mm J human being on the eartn averse to as cumulating money, and as much of it as possible? Mr. Yanderbilt is compelled to endure the most persnte" abuse in silence, and I suppose he has become used to it. I met a o-acs confidential agent of Mr. Yanderbilt the other day, and the topic of great fortunes came up during an extended conversation. ' Jrew people know Mr. anderbiltas he really is, said the ex-agent. hven members of his own family know him only on the surface. - Let me tell vou that, he is big-hearted man there isn't a stingy hair in ' his head, and when I tell you that he gives away $2 0,000 every year I know what 1 am talking about, be cause I have handled a good deal of it myself. He is compelled to give his charity in a manner as stealthy as a tramp would steal a coat, because if he made any display of it, or it was known precisely from what source the charity came, his life would be made un endurable bv beggars. I know he used to rficeive from twenty to 150 begging letters every dav, and it re quired the services of a confidential clerk to sort out these things from his business and social letters. I don't envy Yanderbilt his hundreds of mill ions. He is not the happiest man in the world, and if it wasn't for his splendid constitution, and his habit of always looking at the cheerful side of things, he would have been in a lunatic asylum or his crave long ago, Do you think he cares much about the newspaper criticisms?" sotasmuch as ne did a lew years ago. Ihe things that gall mm most are the cartoons in the comic papers. One of these fine davs certain New York editors will find themselves fac ing a lot of libel suits; and when Mr. Yanderbilt thinks lie has just cause to go for a man he does it without fear or favor, and I never knew him to fail in his purpose." Ite Xot Too Fast, Detroit Free Press. Mr. Matthew Arnold greatly offended the American portion of his Boston au dience by speaking of "great, intelligent, sensual, avaricious America." The por tion of unmerchantable eggs and the cabbages not already exhausted on the lecturer for saying that Emerson was not a great philosopher or a great poet, was brought into requisition. But when the lecturer explained that this phrase was a quotation from one of Emerson's let ters to Carlyle, the angry audience wanted to take it all back, and naturally felt a good deal abashed at not knowing their Enierson any better. They felt as did a class of college boys who greeted with shouts of laugh" ter what they thought was too "hifalu tin" and gorgeous a composition that one of their number was rending. After about ten pages of the brilliant rhetoric which provoked the.'r mirth, he ended by saying: "Thus speaks Macaulay in his immortal essav on history." The boys didn't laugh for a week. The late Dr. Kenealy, the Tichborne claimant's counsel and subsequently a member of parliament, was making a speech before that body when he said that something would, "like a dew drop from the lion's mane bo 6hook to air." As he was thought to be more or less a "crank" this remark was supposed to be some unusual idiocy of his own, and the house roared in derision. The other 3ides of their mouths were as visibly agitated, however, when they learned that this ridiculous language was first uttered by another Englishman named Shakespeare. How a litre or Trouble Was Avoided. Kentucky State Journal. A few days ago "a middle-aged coun tryman walked into the office of a prominent Newport attorney aifd took a seat, when the following took place: "I called in to see about gittin a di vorce from my wife. " "Ah; what seems to be the diffi culty?" " Well, me and Jinuy are always quarr'lin, and think it would be better if she would go back to her folks and I'd stay where I am. She ken take the three children with her." "On what grounds do you want a di vorce ?" "Well, you sea it's jist this way; Jin ny's the most skeeriest woman of tramps ye ever seen. And so when we go up stairs to bed, she always jumps in bed first, and then she wants me to lo k under the bed for a man when I know there ain't no man there. So ou see that riles me and I get mad, and then she gets mad, and then there s a fuss and I don t have no jjeacrj and can t gat no sleep, and I'm a hard workin' mau." "You can't get a divorce on those grounds, sir." I can't T "No, sir." "Well, then, I know what I'll do. I'll go home and saw the legs off the bed, close up, so a man can't git under. If I had thought of that sooner I might hev saved all this time coinin' in here." Government Photograph Shop. New York Sun. Immediately in the rear of the treas ury department is a roomy wooden cot tage, the purpose of which is often in quired about. It is a photographic establishment run .at public expense. Nominally it is an establishment where the photographs are taken of counter feits and other engravings deemed im portant to be preserved. t , I here is a considerable corps of operatives, or artists, in this establish ment, whose numbers would be less but for the demand for photographs by officials at the cost of the government. Among the most constant patrons is Secretary Folger, who has a passion for that sort of thing. After Arthur, who has no peer, the judge is the handsom e t man in the administration, not ex cepting Chandler himself consequently the demand for his picture, in all sizes aud attitudes, is great. He is a fre quent sitter, and distributes freely his pictures amoner his frends, with his autograph, beside? laying away a good supply lor future use. 1 There is being prepared at this gov ernment shop a special collection of photographs of the judge, full face, half face, sitting, standug, and in almost every position except standing on his head. Formerly there was a demand for Chandler's piciuie, but of late it has fallen oil. V hi;e for nobleness of fea tures Folger is much adm.red, for rea! beauty Chandler bears off the palm. THE LARGEST WALNUT LOG Bronxht from France and Cut Into i Mherts for Veneering. New York Letter. I From an enormous walnut log in a shed behind the veneer cutting mill at 156 Elizabeth street, recently, a huge knife, weighing a ton or more, sliced off sheets the thickness of heavy note paper, forty-five to the inch. The log, of which the past that was cut up was as large a piece as could be handled at one time, was the largest ever brought to this country from a foreign land. It was brought over in the steam ship Katie, and dragged to Elizabeth street by five teams of horses. The top end which still lies in the street is twenty-seven feet around and nine feet turougn. wnen tne trunK was whole it weighed 22,000 pounds, and it is estimated that it will yield nearly VU.UUU feet of veneer Half a dozen men dragged a cros3-cut saw through it for a whole day in the effort to cut it in pieces small enough to handle, and on the second day were obliged to split it with wedges at the risk of injuring it. It was expected that a log of its size would have two hearts, but only one was found. Ihe log was bought by Mr. L. Ilirsch, of 214 Centre street, when on a visit to France last summer. Guided by re ports of prodigious trees that grew in the south of France, he found it at the village of Perigeaux, in the northern foothills of the Pyrenees. It was said to be the largest tree in the country. and was probably from 803 to 1,000 years old. Forty men and twenty-two horses dragged it to the nearest railway station, whence it was taken to Pans. A special steam lighter was required to take it to the Katie, its cost, when it was landed in New York, was fully $5,000. The wood, when polished, is a deep black and orange, and its grain is twisted in many peculiar shapes. Em bedded in the trunk were found several odd-shaped musket balls. Oil on the Waters. The Toronto Globe publishes the fol lowing communication : In your issue of the 8th inst. there is an article on The Application of Oil to the Waters of a Stormy Sea," and the wish is ex pressed that some of your readers would try the experiment and send an account to your paper. I tried the experiment about two months ago on Lake Erie. I send you the result. The day was stormy and a very heavy sea running, and although we were running with the sea, with our engine full open, it would break over the stern occasionally; and although there was no apparent danger to us from the boisterous sea, it it or-curred to me to try the effects of oil on the waters. I went into the engine room and got an oil can with a spout on, the t ame as is on the ordinary half-gallon can used for coal oil. I went to the stern and commenced to pour a small stream of oil on the water. The sea at once ceased to break, and for two or three hundred feet astern the effects of the oil could be plainly seen. The wave would rush madly on, capped by a huge breaker, but immediately the oil was reached the angry breaker would sub side and the sea would come on as large as ever, but perfectly smooth and, as a matter of course, harmless. The oil used was a machine oil manufactured roni petroleum. I think any sort of oil would answer, but of course the more oilv matter the oil contained the letter result would follow. I have no doubt at all as to the utility of o:l for the purpose in question if it can be ap plied in the proper place, but as to how could be applied to a head or beam sea I do not kuow; but to a sea running after a boat it is very easily applied by simply pouring it over the stern. First opportunity will try the experiment in head and beam sea, and write you result. W. M. Aldekson, Master Tug Walter P. Tnbbs. . Tim and Trade. friaries Dudley "Warner. The world is practically divided into two classes debtor and creditor. This classification is no mora accurate than that of saints and sinners, but it holds true that some men are naturally debtors, and others naturally creditors. In the district school even, where the stock in trade is slate-pencils, fish- looks, and chewing-gum, tlnre are certain to be two or three boys who are capitalists, always making a corner in their trousers pockets, while the rest of the boys are borrowers. Now the cred itors like this sys'em of months and years. They watch the manner of these artificial periods with interest, in order to send in their bills aud extort their profits. They have nearly mined the glad new year taken all the poet ry out of it. They have filled it with mercantile and sordid suggestions. They often poison the most tender ns- sociations. The writer, who at family prayers, daily and for years, heard his grandfather say, "The bells of mortal ity are sounding in our ears," grew up with the impression that he vas say ing, "the bills of mcrlality are 'sound- iag in our ears. And it turned out that they are. Twonld He Cheaper. Arkansaw Traveler. A Scotchman who arrived in Little lock while the ladies were going around with the petitions with a view to the en forcement of the temperance law, was approached bv nn enthusiastic woman who requested his signature. He did not understand, and she explained that an enforcement of the law prohibiting a saloon within three miles of a church. "I dona much aboot it.but I dinna ken but 'twould be cheaper to move the kirks than the whiskv shops," and with this idea of public expenditure he re used to sigu the petition. EN ROUTE TO THE PACIFIC. Munie of the I'npleaaantness of Travel---Xcvsda Vot Advancing In Wealth. Edward Roberts in Chicago News. It costs exactly $1 to get anything to eat at the stations on the Central Pacific road, and one is only given twenty-five minutes in which to eat that dollar'? worth of food. Phil Bobinson in his latest book, "Sinners and Saints," ques tions ' whether or not a Pullman car conductor is a gentleman of leisure traveling for pleasure. I question what the mission is of table waiting gins at railway stations. They certainly can not wait on people to show their beauty, for I rarely come across a pretty ait- ress. Nor are tuey employed to teach one manners, for they have none them selves. It mnst be that tbey are in vented to teach travelers patience. The way they throw food at one, and the in different air wtli which they take an order makes one want to swear. But he can't 6wear at a woman, and it would do no good if he did. The Central Pa cific girls take delight in being surly. I never saw one smile, and I also never saw any one they pretended to wait on smile. It will be a glad day when the road runs its own dining-cars through to 'Frisco. I should be content to eat in such cars as run on the Burlington road to Pacific Junction from Chicago even if I got much less to eat than I do at the eating stations. There would be at least one satisfaction a mau could enjoy some degree of regularity, which he surelv cannot do under the present condition of affairs. But in spite of hunger, and notwithstanding the roughness of the road, I had a good sleep while we sped westward through the night, and Beno was reached just as I got up. The only importance Beno has is that it serves &a a junction station for trains going off the Central Pacific road to Virginia City. I talked with a man who got on our train, and who made his home at this once blooming citv in Nevada. "Virginia City to-day," he said, "lives on its past reputation. A few years ago it had a population of . 21,000 people, and now there are not over 7,000 there. And not that many would stay if they could only get awav. Business is ab solutely dead, and unless some new and valuable discoveries are made, nothing will save the place. " Are the old bonanza mines worked out?" I asked. ' Yes," he said ; " nearly so, if not entirely. Levels are down 3,500 feet, and the ore found won t pay hauling up. Many people have lost their all in the city, and those who put money into real estate are hurt the most. It is abso lutely impossible to sell a house or a business, a.id the cost of living is enormous. It seems to have been a policy of the Central Pacific to destroy lrginia City. 1 he ireight on ore to 'Frisco is $34 a ton. and on wheat $28 a ton, and is relatively as great on all goods." " Is Nevada a couutry for cereal growing ' les; but a farmer can t raise wheat and pay $28 a ton freight to get it to market. Neither can we pay $34 a ton on ore and make any money. The truth is Nevada cannot advance in wealth unless the roa I reduces its charges and ceases its persecutions." "Goth! It's a Telephone X" Inter Cc .hii.J A well-to-do but unsophisticated farmer from one of the border counties of Indiana was iu the city lately at tending the fat stock slnw, and broaght alo: g his wife and daujjhtars to see the sights and do some shopping. Anion: other places they visited was Mandel s new store, and, after wandering around the first floor for awhile, the party cam" to a stop near t.ic elevator. One of the daughters was first to dis cover the cars moving silently up and down, receiving and discharging their cargoes of passengers. She jerked her father's coat-sleeve t direct his atten tion to the phenomenon, and, in a tone that was audible to the clerks in the neighborhood, asked: " hat s that, paw that thing going up and down, with ofys in it?" The old man gave the etevator along calm, deliberate, scrutinizing stare, and exclaimed, w ith joy : "By gosh I it s a telephone! the first I ever see !" A Few Health Aphorisms. Popular Science Monthly. I A change of air is less valuable than a change of scene. The air is changed every time the direction of the wind is changed. Calisthenics nray be very genteel, and romping verv ungenteel; but one is the shadow, the other the substance, of healthful exercise. Blessed be he who invented sleep, but thrice blessed the man who will invent a cure for thinking. Dirt, debauchery, disease, and death are successive links in the same chain. - India's MasrnltnJe. In attempting to assist the reader to realize the magnitude of India The Spectator says that it. contains some 50,000,000 more people than the whole of Euroie. India has sixty-two cities of more than 50,000 people, twenty-two with more than a 100,000, while Cal cutta contains about 8Gt5,000 souls. There are hundreds of cities of 20,000, even the names of which are generally unknown to Europeans. A FAN-SONG. Edward Wick. Fa a me to rest, for sleep-time sweet is com- inor. And oh! so tired I, and oh I so restlrs. The grateful opiate of thy serenely smiling Only can charm me into mouguis aisires Ksj. Fan me, 1 ve, fau me, love, daylight it dead, love Dead its dark sorrow dead its wild jest; Into the lan i of old bygones 'oisfled, love; Fan me to rest 1 Love, do you hear the last lone bird-born solo Drifting tnis-way-wara irom tne gnm ereat beeches t Render it o'er to me, and sing it low low reaches. Fan me, love, fan me, love, gone is the day's love Gone its weird hatreds yet I'm dis tressed! To-morrow I've got fifteen dollars to raise love; F-f-f-fan mo to rest' John llole O'ltHlly. Leander Ric iarl on. The other day I say John Boyle O'Beilly in fie street. O'Beilly is one of the salt of the eart'i it sen s ad vantageous to be one of the salt rather than one of the fresh of tae eath. O'i'eilly is a roet, a - enian an e-sav- ist, a fanatic, a philosopher, a luna 10 on the question of canoeing, a wit, an orator, an editor, and auy:hing else you mav happen to think of t at J have ex cepted. Mr. O'Beilly is a charming man in whatever walk of life he may happen td be in for the moment. O'lieilly can maks a very interesting half hour for Dr. Oliver en-lell Holmes, of Boston, with his conversa tion, and he can also make a very in teresting half hour for John Ju. Sulli van, of Boston, with a set of lo-;ing gloves. Hrt is one of the best fencers in the country: ho can run like a deer, and he can hit a blow that is like the kick of a multicharge mule. OBeilly was a youngster in tne queen's army, and an informer swore that he had induced many of his com rades to be in readiness to turn Eng land's arms against her in the cause of Ireland. He was a r enian, fast enough, but he says this was the work of a per jurer. Anyway u neuiy was senien -eii to exportation for life. He escaped from the penal colony, was taken on board a Yankee schooner, got into Eng land, hid himself iu Liverpool for awhile, and ultimately reached Amer ica, lie finally became tae editor oi The Boston Pilot, which is a paper that is made up too largely of clippings; but the editorial page of which always contains matter that is shot as straight from the shoulder as the bullet is shot from the gun. Boyle O'Beilly works hard, and has gained a literary reputa tion. He is a young man, of dark eyes, a closely-cropped head, a black mus tache, short stature, and an expression of perfect good humor. I would rather have a Philadelphia newspaper read to me than have him caress me with a boxing glove. French Characteristics. Paris Letter in Courier-JournaL It is a too general idea among us that the French are insincere. We have not found them so, and I think it base ingratitude in any true-born American to do their national character such injustice. Can we remember tho noble LaFayette and his chivalric fol lowers who lent their strong right arms as a bulwark in defense of our rights and to aid us in the struggle for our country's freedom, and not feel bound by every tie of gratitude and sentiment to their countrymen ? I do not daro to say there is not some insincerity here, for thoro ftrj protxl and bad traits in every nation. John Bull is a noble animal, but he is also tyran nical and morose sometimes; Sandy leal and clannish, but stubborn to a fault; nans is nonest bus a trifle too phlegmatic and unfeel ing, and "Uncle Sam," with his many fine traits, is known to be upon occa dons a slippery individual. But it would be neither fair nor wise to judge them by the vulnerable spot in their natures, to blow away all the grain, leaving only the chaff. - Take the French from a general point of view ; kind and clever, chivalric and hospitable, heroic and patriotic (for I know not a s.nle l rencuman w no would nt bleed and die for, hi coun try's sake), and admire and reupect them for what they are. We must not judge t. em by oltaire, for he, ws noS a typical lrencaman: he had their head, but not their heart, and did more harm than they even nuw see. Yet their very respect for his memory shows what beautiful na ures they have ready to forgive and forget. A (icriomin Leadluz a Charge. Chicago Tribun. The Bev. George Washington Nolley, who died last week at Ashland, Va., aged 80 years, had performe I fifty-eight yars' active service in the Metholist ministry. He it was who led a charge of the Confederate troops in the battle at Brook Church, near Bichmond. In the midst of the fight, as the story is told in "Soldier Life in ihe Army of Northern Virginia," a voice was heard shouting, "Where's mv boy? I'm look ing for my boy!" Soon the owner of the voice appeared tall, slim, aged, with silver-gray hair, dressed in a full suit of broadcloth. A tall silk hat and a clerical collar and cravat completed his attire. His voice, familiar to the people of Virginia, was deep and pow erful. As he continued to shout the men replied : "Go back, old gentleman ; you'll get hurt here: go back, go back!" "No, no," said he, "I can go anywhere my boy has to go, and t ie Lord is here. I want to see my boy, and I will see him !" Then the order "Forward" was given, and tho men made one more for the enemy. The old gentleman, his beaver in ono hand, a big stick in the other, his long hair flying, shouting, "Come on, brys!'' dis appeared in the depths of the woods, well in front. - A Ills IMctlonary. Demorest's Monthly. The first part of a gigantic dictionary of the English language is about to be issued by the Oxford university. It was commenced twenty-five yars back, and more than 800 persons have been employed in collecting material for this mighty history of every world in the English speaking language. The Chi nese are said to have cyclopedias upon which thousands of literati were at work all their lives. This work is almost of a similar character. It will give the history and definition of 2 i7,()0u words. There are to be twenty-four parts of 350 pages each. All the volumes are very large, with three columns to the page. The history, detinition and changes in every word used in the Eng lish language will be foun in this mar velous and minute compendium. The cost of this work will be over half a million dollars, but Oxford university will doubtless receive )mething from the sales of these great volumes, which, when completed, will be the most com plete thesaurus in any language. Inter Ocean: "While an American girl looks with favor ou a duke or a count, the English girl snatches up an American plumber and has the best of the swap svery ttma,